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Darden Restaurants
supports GAA Best Aquaculture Practices, will
require farmed shrimp suppliers to be BAP certified
The
Global Aquaculture Alliance announced today
that Darden Restaurants, Inc. -- the world's
largest casual dining company in sales and
market share -- supports GAA's newly revised
Best
Aquaculture Practices standards and will
begin requiring its farmed shrimp suppliers
to become BAP-certified.
The Best Aquaculture Practices certification standards provide
quantitative international guidelines and auditing procedures that limit environmental
impacts and protect the wholesomeness of shrimp throughout the production process.
Developed by the Global Aquaculture Alliance with input from technical experts
and non-governmental organizations, the BAP program includes participating
shrimp hatcheries, farms and processing plants worldwide.
"It isn't surprising that Darden Restaurants was the first company in the
restaurant
industry to adopt the BAP standards," Global Aquaculture Alliance President
George Chamberlain said. "Darden has been a pioneer in supporting responsible
aquaculture and seafood safety."
Darden, which owns and operates more than 1,400 Red Lobster, Olive Garden,
Bahama Breeze, Smokey Bones and Seasons 52 restaurants, adds the BAP standards to
its already stringent internal program of food quality assurance testing.
"BAP certification benefits consumers, buyers and the diverse aquaculture
supply chain by providing a uniform set of standards to assure that shrimp are responsibly
produced," Chamberlain said.
"This certification program will improve sustainable practices across a
wide range of shrimp-farming activities, such as wetland conservation, effluent
management and drug and chemical management," Darden Vice President of Environmental
Relations George Williams said. "These practices represent continuous improvement
in the environmental, social and food safety aspects of
shrimp farming."
The Best Aquaculture Practices standards are exclusively implemented through
site inspections and ongoing audits carried out by Aquaculture Certification
Council, Inc. During inspections, its global team of independent certifiers
reviews facility procedures and infrastructure, samples effluents and checks
records for compliance. ACC also requires traceability of shrimp products from
processing plants back through the supply chain to the farms and ponds where
the animals were raised.
"In keeping with Darden's ongoing commitment to quality assurance and responsible
production, we are joining these efforts," Darden Senior Vice President
of
Seafood Purchasing Bill Herzig said. "We aim to help the
entire industry come together around quantitative standards and certification
of compliance."
Global Aquaculture Alliance is an international
non-profit trade
organization dedicated to advancing responsible
fish and shellfish farming. GAA plans to
build on the current BAP standards with additional
components for shrimp feed mill certification
and laboratory
verification of the food safety of final
shrimp products. Once the comprehensive standards
for farmed shrimp are complete, GAA will
begin to introduce
parallel standards for farmed fish and mollusks.
For additional information on the Best
Aquaculture Practices standards,
contact BAP Standards Coordinator Daniel
Lee: telephone +44-1248-713591, e-mail dangaelle@aol.com;
or the Global Aquaculture Alliance office:
telephone +1-314-293-5500, e-mail homeoffice@gaalliance.org .
For
more on BAP facility certification, visit
the Aquaculture Certification Council,
Inc. website at
http://www.aquaculturecertification.org or
contact ACC Vice President William More
at +1-425-825-7935, e-mail wrmore@aquaculturecertification.org .
SOURCES:
Global
Aquaculture Alliance
Web Site: http://www.aquaculturecertification.org
PRNewswire
Web Site: http://wwwprnewswire.com
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